@Sorairo Sorry, a question- what's Madagascar's history in this timeline please?
Also, anyone been to Mars yet?
Declared independence in the 1960s and has been quiet since within the Francophonie. No one's been to Mars yet but the Americans are going soon to make sure the Chinese don't beat them
A few questions that I missed...
1) Which halves of "Angola" and "Mozambique" are white and which are black?
2) How did New Guinea unify?
3) Is Brunei as OTL?
4) How is Cyprus?
5) Is Argentina still complaining about the Falklands?
The western portion of Angola and southern portion of Mozambique are part of the 66% White Lusitanian Kingdom, with the other portions are about 95% Black.
New Guinea unified during the Indonesian emergency and was content being part of a democracy instead of returning to dictatorship.
Yes, though less Islamist in its law.
Cyprus is more developed and still has racial animosity between the local Greeks and Turks.
They complain about it as much as Russia complains about Alaska - it's not considered feasible to get it back so they don't care as much. They have a slightly more tense relationship with Chile though.
They share the same head of state though they are totally independent in decision making, it's more like a Commonwealth than anything else.
Monarchies with some power | Monarchies, ceremonial head of state | Republics |
Germany | UK | Iceland |
Hungary | Netherlands | Ireland |
Romania | Belgium | France |
Bulgaria | Luxembourg | Finland |
Spain | Austria | Portugal |
Italy | Denmark | Czechoslovakia |
Croatia-Bosnia | Norway | Serbia |
Greece | Sweden | Poland |
Vatican City | Liechtenstein | Switzerland |
| Monaco | Andorra |
| | San Marino |
The Kaiser has very little power - the Allies were never going to open THAT can of worms. Apart from that, Spain has about the same level of monarchical interference as OTL.
Enjoyable and well written timeline indeed. A couple of minor points:
- a more prosperous Latin America would likely mean more, not less immigration to Estados Unitos.
- higher military spending in Italy combined with continuing wars would likely mean a less prosperous Italy - even if the ww2 fighting in Italy proper is avoided.
People immigrate (and its serious business to leave your community and friends) when they have either a strong enough pull or push. With America's lead in human rights and living standards not being as big as OTL, and Latin America more developed, there is not as much of an incentive to go.
Italy is primarily better off due to the global rising tide of economics rather than its own genius.